Celebrating Haleem at Hyderabad's Pista House

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Across the world there are are foods we associate with religious holidays. In London, you might eat hot cross buns for Easter, for example. In India, one of the most celebrated and popular religious dishes is a meat delicacy called haleem.

Although haleem is known as a dish for Ramadan, it is enjoyed by Hindus, Muslims, and Christians alike.

When I arrive at the Pista House haleem factory there are 12 enormous colanders of lamb meat, eight vats of clarified butter, called ghee, and a king size bed sheet full of garlic blocking my path to the kitchen. Within minutes these materials are swept up and put into production.

Every day during Ramadan, Pista House produces thousands of pounds of haleem, a delicacy that can best describe as a smooth meat porridge.

The Pista House kitchen has brick walls and dirt floors. There are about 20 cauldrons that stand a little more than waist-high, each with a fire burning underneath it.

"Every day we use 20 tons of fire wood," said Pista House owner Mohd Abdul Majeed.

"This is haleem cooking for 10 hours, with wheat and meat," he said. "We're mixing the raw material."

First the wheat and the meat are boiled for 10 hours, until they form kind of a chunky paste. That paste is then moved into a separate set of cauldrons and they shake a giant bag of what looks like potpourri into the meat.

Then about 20 gallons of pale yellow ghee, the clarified butter, is poured into the mix and two men spend the next two-three hours rhythmically mashing the meat with giant wooden poles until it becomes totally smooth and thoroughly infused with the famous Pista House flavor.

Haleem is originally an Arabic dish, brought to Hyderabad by the immigrants of Yemen, Iran and Afghanistan.

Majeed said he first tried haleem on a trip to Saudi Arabia 20 years ago during Ramadan. He was very impressed with the dish.

"It has very good energy and proteins; it's very very rich," he said. "

The high calorie haleem is the perfect way for Muslims to break their Ramadan fast each day, which is why Pista House is in constant hustle mode during Ramadan: every major city in India needs its haleem by sundown.

"We send haleem to the airport at 2 o'clock, then on to cities in India, to Delhi, Bombay, Chennai, Calcutta, and Bangalore. We have 346 outlets in Hyderabad and Secunderabad," Majeed said. "We actually had 30,000 orders from the US, but we don't have a license for that. We hope to send haleem to the US in 2013."

Even though haleem is considered a predominately Muslim food, Majeed explained that it's just one of those things that bring people together.

This is not for any religion, this is a dish for human being," he said. In India, in Hyderabad, all peoples eat haleem… Hindus, Christians, Muslims no problem."

And it's true. As the sun is setting and Pista House is preparing its last batch of the day the hundreds men gathering outside Pista House's main branch next door are a mix of Hindus and Muslims united in their common love of haleem.

And in fact, even I am becoming a little curious about this haleem.

The haleem is hot and rich. It's buttery bouquet of rose and cardamom and of course, lamb. I can't eat very much of it, but then again, I didn't fast all day.

Anchor Marco Werman wanted to try for himself what haleem tastes like. Below, he traveled down the street from The World's newsroom in Boston to Darbar, a Pakistan-Indian restaurant where the popular dish is served.

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